Introduction: Patients with locally extensive high-grade extremity soft tissue sarcomas (eSTS) are often presented in multidisciplinary teams to decide between ablative surgery (amputation) or limb... Show moreIntroduction: Patients with locally extensive high-grade extremity soft tissue sarcomas (eSTS) are often presented in multidisciplinary teams to decide between ablative surgery (amputation) or limb-salvage surgery supplemented with either neo-adjuvant radiotherapy (RT) or induction isolated limb perfu-sion (ILP).In The Netherlands, ILP typically aims to reduce the size of tumors that would otherwise be considered irresectable, whereas neo-adjuvant RT aims mainly at improving local control and reducing morbidity of required marginal margins. This study presents a 15-year nationwide cohort to describe the oncological outcomes of both pre-operative treatment strategies.Methods: All consecutive patients with locally extensive primary high-grade eSTS surgically treated between 2000 and 2015 at five tertiary sarcoma centers that received neo-adjuvant ILP or RT were included. 169 patients met the inclusion criteria (89 ILP, 80 RT). Median follow-up was 7.3 years. Results: Limb salvage was achieved in 84% of cases in the ILP group (80% for patients with amputation indication) and 96% of cases in the RT group. 5-Year overall survival was 47% in the ILP group, 69% in the RT group. 5-Year local recurrence rate was 14% in the ILP group, 10% in the RT group. Distant metastasis rate was 55% in the ILP group, 36% in the RT group.Conclusion: We find oncological outcomes and limb salvage rates in line with existing literature for both treatment modalities. Whether the tumor was locally advanced with an indication for induction therapy to prevent amputation or morbid surgery appeared to be the main determinant in choosing between neo-adjuvant ILP or RT.(c) 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). Show less
Chondrosarcoma and giant cell tumour of bone (GCTB) are bone tumours characterized by recurrent mutations (IDH1/IDH2 and H3F3A, respectively) that induce remodelling of the epigenetic landscape.... Show moreChondrosarcoma and giant cell tumour of bone (GCTB) are bone tumours characterized by recurrent mutations (IDH1/IDH2 and H3F3A, respectively) that induce remodelling of the epigenetic landscape. The standard of care for both of these sarcoma subtypes is surgery and alternative treatment options for patients with inoperable disease are currently lacking (chondrosarcoma) or suboptimal (GCTB). Therefore, the aim of this thesis was to identify novel therapeutic targets for high-grade chondrosarcoma as well as GCTB, with a focus on potential therapies that could counteract the remodelling of the epigenome. PARP and HDAC inhibition, alone or in combination treatment strategies, were identified as promising therapeutic strategies for chondrosarcoma or both of these bone tumours, respectively. Additionally, this thesis describes the development and use of novel 3D cell culture models which can be used to improve the translation of preclinical findings to the clinic. Show less
This thesis describes the generation of cell-of-origin based models, using mesenchymal stem cells, to further elucidate the underlying mechanism of molecular alterations of the bone-forming tumours... Show moreThis thesis describes the generation of cell-of-origin based models, using mesenchymal stem cells, to further elucidate the underlying mechanism of molecular alterations of the bone-forming tumours osteoid osteoma, osteoblastoma and osteosarcoma. Furthermore, we describe the identification of novel treatment options for osteosarcoma using 2D and 3D in vitro models. Show less
Background: In ultra-rare sarcomas (URS) the conduction of prospective, randomized trials is challenging. Data from retrospective observational studies (ROS) may represent the best evidence... Show moreBackground: In ultra-rare sarcomas (URS) the conduction of prospective, randomized trials is challenging. Data from retrospective observational studies (ROS) may represent the best evidence available. ROS implicit limitations led to poor acceptance by the scientific community and regulatory authorities. In this context, an expert panel from the Connective Tissue Oncology Society (CTOS), agreed on the need to establish a set of minimum requirements for conducting high-quality ROS on the activity of systemic therapies in URS. Methods: Representatives from > 25 worldwide sarcoma reference centres met in November 2020 and identified a list of topics summarizing the main issues encountered in ROS on URS. An online survey on these topics was distributed to the panel; results were summarized by descriptive statistics and discussed during a second meeting (November 2021). Results: Topics identified by the panel included the use of ROS results as external control data, the criteria for contributing centers selection, modalities for ensuring a correct pathological diagnosis and radiologic assessment, consistency of surveillance policies across centers, study end-points, risk of data duplication, results publication. Based on the answers to the survey (55 of 62 invited experts) and discussion the panel agreed on 18 statements summarizing principles of recommended practice. Conclusions: These recommendations will be disseminated by CTOS across the sarcoma community and incorporated in future ROS on URS, to maximize their quality and favor their use as control data when results from prospective studies are unavailable. These recommendations could help the optimal conduction of ROS also in other rare tumors. Show less
The phase III clinical study of adjuvant liposomal muramyl tripeptide (MTP-PE) in resected high-grade osteosarcoma (OS) documented positive results that have been translated into regulatory... Show moreThe phase III clinical study of adjuvant liposomal muramyl tripeptide (MTP-PE) in resected high-grade osteosarcoma (OS) documented positive results that have been translated into regulatory approval, supporting initial promise for innate immune therapies in OS. There remains, however, no new approved treatment such as MTP-PE for either metastatic or recurrent OS. Whilst the addition of different agents, including liposomal MTP-PE, to surgery for metastatic or recurrent high-grade osteosarcoma has tried to improve response rates, a mechanistic hiatus exists in terms of a detailed understanding the therapeutic strategies required in advanced disease. Here we report a Bayesian designed multi-arm, multi-centre, open-label phase II study with randomisation in patients with metastatic and/or recurrent OS, designed to investigate how patients with OS might respond to liposomal MTP-PE, either given alone or in combination with ifosfamide. Despite the trial closing because of poor recruitment within the allocated funding period, with no objective responses in eight patients, we report the design and feasibility outcomes for patients registered into the trial. We demonstrate the feasibility of the Bayesian design, European collaboration, tissue collection with genomic analysis and serum cytokine characterisation. Further mechanistic investigation of liposomal MTP-PE alone and in combination with other agents remains warranted in metastatic OS. Show less
Background We aimed at investigating outcome of systemic treatments in advanced breast PT. Methods All cases of advanced breast PT treated with systemic treatments from 1999 to 2019, in one of the... Show moreBackground We aimed at investigating outcome of systemic treatments in advanced breast PT. Methods All cases of advanced breast PT treated with systemic treatments from 1999 to 2019, in one of the referral sarcoma centers involved in the study, were retrospectively reviewed. Results 56 female patients were identified. Median age was 52 (range of 25-76) years. Patients received a median number of 2 systemic treatments (range of 1-4). Best responses according to RECIST were 1 (3.7%) CR, 11 (40.7%) PR, 6 (22.2%) SD, 9 (33.3%) PD with anthracyclines plus ifosfamide (AI); 2 (16.7%) PR, 4 (33.3%) SD, 6 (50.0%) PD with anthracycline alone; 3 (18.8%) PR, 4 (25.0%) SD, 9 (56.3%) PD with high-dose ifosfamide given as a continuous infusion (HD-IFX); 3 (20.0%) SD, 12 (80.0%) PD with a gemcitabine-based regimen (with 2 patients not evaluable); 1 (8.3%) PR, 2 (16.7%) SD, 9 (75.0%) PD with trabectedin (with 1 patient not evaluable); 1 (16.7%) PR, 1 (16.7%) SD, 4 (66.7%) PD with tyrosine-kinase inhibitors (TKI). The median PFS were 5.7 (IQR 2.5-9.1) months with AI; 3.2 (IQR 2.2-5.0) months with anthracycline alone; 3.4 (IQR 1.4-6.7) months with HD-IFX; 2.1 (IQR 1.4-5.2) months with gemcitabine-based chemotherapy; 1.8 (IQR 0.7-6.6) months with trabectedin; 3.4 (IQR 3.1-3.8) months with TKI. With a median follow-up of 35.3 (IQR 17.6-66.9) months, OS from the start of first-line systemic treatment was 15.2 (IQR 7.6-39.6) months. Conclusion In this series of advanced PT (to our knowledge, the largest reported so far), AI was associated with a high rate of responses, however, with a median PFS of 5.7 months. Other systemic treatments were poorly active. Show less
Meekeren, M. van; Bovee, J.V.M.G.; Coevorden, F. van; Houdt, W. van; Schrage, Y.; Koenen, A.M.; ... ; Haas, R.L. 2021
Purpose A prior phase I study showed that the neo-adjuvant combination of pazopanib and radiotherapy was well tolerated, and induced promising pathological responses in soft-tissue sarcoma patients... Show morePurpose A prior phase I study showed that the neo-adjuvant combination of pazopanib and radiotherapy was well tolerated, and induced promising pathological responses in soft-tissue sarcoma patients. Results of the subsequent prospective, multicenter phase II, PASART-2 trial are presented here, further investigating the efficacy and safety of this combination. Patients and methods Patients with high-risk, localized soft-tissue sarcoma received neo-adjuvant radiotherapy, 50 Gy in 25 fractions (PASART-2A) or with a subsequent dose de-escalation to 36 Gy in 18 fractions (PASART-2B). This was combined with 800 mg once daily pazopanib, which started one week before radiotherapy and finished simultaneously. After an interval of 4-8 weeks, surgical resection was performed. The primary endpoint was the rate of pathological complete responses (pCR), defined as <= 5% viable cells. Results 25 patients were registered in the study, 21 in PASART-2A and 4 in PASART-2B. After central pathology review, the combination treatment led to a pCR in 5 patients (20%). 17 patients (68%) experienced grade 3+ toxicities during neo-adjuvant treatment, of which the most common were alanine aminotransferase (ALT) elevation, aspartate aminotransferase (AST) elevation, and hypertension, all asymptomatic. Grade 3+ acute post-operative toxicities occurred in 5 patients (20%), of which the most common was wound infection. All patients completed the full radiotherapy regimen and underwent surgery. Pazopanib was discontinued before completion in 9 patients (36%), due to elevated ALT and/or AST, and shortly interrupted in 2 patients (8%), due to hypertension. Conclusion Apart from asymptomatic hepatotoxicity, the study regimen was well tolerated. Although the pre-specified efficacy endpoint (30% pCR) was not met, a more than doubling of historical pCR rates after neo-adjuvant radiotherapy alone was observed, which warrants further investigation. Show less
Opinion statement Soft tissue sarcomas (STS) are rare, aggressive, and heterogenous tumors, comprising approximately 1% of adult cancers with over 50 different subtypes. The mainstay of treatment... Show moreOpinion statement Soft tissue sarcomas (STS) are rare, aggressive, and heterogenous tumors, comprising approximately 1% of adult cancers with over 50 different subtypes. The mainstay of treatment for retroperitoneal sarcomas (RPS) includes surgical resection. The addition of radiation therapy (RT), either preoperatively or postoperatively, has been used to potentially decrease the risk of local recurrence. The recently published results from STRASS (EORTC-STBSG 62092-22092), which randomized patients to receive or not receive preoperative radiation, indicate no abdominal recurrence-free survival benefit (primary endpoint) nor overall survival benefit to date from the addition of preoperative RT prior to surgical resection in patients with RPS. Keeping in mind caveats of subgroup analyses, the data show a significant reduction in local recurrence with radiation therapy in resected patients and non-significant trends toward improved abdominal recurrence-free survival in all patients and improved local control and abdominal recurrence-free survival in patients with liposarcoma and low-grade sarcoma. Given the high rate of local failure with surgery alone, it is possible that higher RT dose and/or selective RT dose painting may improve outcomes. Prior to treatment, the authors encourage multidisciplinary review and discussion of management options at a sarcoma center for patients with RPS. Selective use of RT may be considered for patients at high risk of local recurrence. Show less
Gennaro, N.; Reijers, S.; Bruining, A.; Messiou, C.; Haas, R.; Colombo, P.; ... ; Graaf, W.T.A. van der 2021
Soft tissue sarcomas (STS) represent a broad family of rare tumours for which surgery with radiotherapy represents first-line treatment. Recently, neoadjuvant chemo-radiotherapy has been... Show moreSoft tissue sarcomas (STS) represent a broad family of rare tumours for which surgery with radiotherapy represents first-line treatment. Recently, neoadjuvant chemo-radiotherapy has been increasingly used in high-risk patients in an effort to reduce surgical morbidity and improve clinical outcomes. An adequate understanding of the efficacy of neoadjuvant therapies would optimise patient care, allowing a tailored approach. Although response evaluation criteria in solid tumours (RECIST) is the most common imaging method to assess tumour response, Choi criteria and functional and molecular imaging (DWI, DCE-MRI and 18F-FDG-PET) seem to outperform it in the discrimination between responders and non-responders. Moreover, the radiologic-pathology correlation of treatment-related changes remains poorly understood. In this review, we provide an overview of the imaging assessment of tumour response in STS undergoing neoadjuvant treatment, including conventional imaging (CT, MRI, PET) and advanced imaging analysis. Future directions will be presented to shed light on potential advances in pre-surgical imaging assessments that have clinical implications for sarcoma patients. Show less
Purpose The impact of MRI on early detection of local recurrence (LR) in high-grade soft-tissue sarcomas (STS) is unsubstantiated. To identify the contribution of MRI criteria including dynamic... Show morePurpose The impact of MRI on early detection of local recurrence (LR) in high-grade soft-tissue sarcomas (STS) is unsubstantiated. To identify the contribution of MRI criteria including dynamic contrast-enhanced (DCE) MRI and knowledge of surgical margins that can be used in detecting recurrence prior to obvious proven presence of LR in soft-tissue sarcomas. The secondary aim was to determine causes for misdiagnosing LR. Methods MRI of 23 patients (12 men; mean age, 59.7 years +/- 16.5 years) with LR of STS and that of 22 age- and histology-matched controls with STS but without LR were retrospectively analyzed by two musculoskeletal radiologists. Preoperative MRI characteristics (conventional and DCE) were compared to those of MRIs made after treatment, but before LR was proven. Likelihood of recurrence was rated on a 5-point Likert scale for morphological and dynamic assessment separately, before and after adding knowledge of surgical margins. Descriptive statistics and receiver operating characteristic analysis were performed. Results Differentiation of LR from post-therapeutic changes was the highest combining result of conventional MRI, DCE-MRI, and knowledge of surgical margins (area under the curve (AUC) 0.779), followed by DCE-MRI (AUC 0.706) and conventional MRI (AUC 0.648). Suboptimal MRI technique and overcalling post-therapeutic changes in microscopic positive margins were the main reasons for false negative and false positive results, respectively. Conclusion MRI including DCE improves the detection of recurrent, clinically silent soft-tissue sarcoma when combined with knowledge of achieved surgical margins. LR may be missed on inadequate MRI protocols. Show less
Martin, E.; Coert, J.H.; Flucke, U.E.; Slooff, W.B.M.; Ho, V.K.Y.; Graaf, W.T. van der; ... ; Verhoef, C. 2020
Background: Despite curative intents of treatment in localized malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumours (MPNSTs), prognosis remains poor. This study investigated survival and prognostic factors... Show moreBackground: Despite curative intents of treatment in localized malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumours (MPNSTs), prognosis remains poor. This study investigated survival and prognostic factors for overall survival in non-retroperitoneal and retroperitoneal MPNSTs in the Netherlands.Methods: Data were obtained from the Netherlands Cancer Registry and the Dutch Pathology Database. All primary MPNSTs were collected. Paediatric cases (age <= 18 years) and synchronous metastases were excluded from analyses. Separate Cox proportional hazard models were made for retroperitoneal and non-retroperitoneal MPNSTs.Results: A total of 629 localized adult MPNSTs (35 retroperitoneal cases, 5.5%) were included for analysis. In surgically resected patients (88.1%), radiotherapy and chemotherapy were administered in 44.2% and 6.7%, respectively. In retroperitoneal cases, significantly less radiotherapy and more chemotherapy were applied. In non-retroperitoneal MPNSTs, older age (60+), presence of NF1, size >5 cm, and deep-seated tumours were independently associated with worse survival. In retroperitoneal MPNSTs, male sex and age of 60+ years were independently associated with worse survival. Survival of R1 and that of R0 resections were similar for any location, whereas R2 resections were associated with worse outcomes. Radiotherapy and chemotherapy administrations were not associated with survival.Conclusion: In localized MPNSTs, risk stratification for survival can be done using several patient-and tumour-specific characteristics. Resectability is the most important predictor for survival in MPNSTs. No difference is present between R1 and R0 resections in both retroperitoneal and non-retroperitoneal MPNSTs. The added value of radiotherapy and chemotherapy is unclear. (C) 2019 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. Show less
Chondrosarcomas are chemo- and radiotherapy resistant and frequently harbor mutationsin isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH1 or IDH2), causing increased levels of D-2-hydroxyglutarate(D-2-HG). DNA repair... Show moreChondrosarcomas are chemo- and radiotherapy resistant and frequently harbor mutationsin isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH1 or IDH2), causing increased levels of D-2-hydroxyglutarate(D-2-HG). DNA repair defects and synthetic lethality with poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP)inhibition occur in IDH mutant glioma and leukemia models. Here we evaluated DNA repairand PARP inhibition, alone or combined with chemo- or radiotherapy, in chondrosarcoma celllines with or without endogenous IDH mutations. Chondrosarcoma cell lines treated with thePARP inhibitor talazoparib were examined for dose–response relationships, as well as underlyingcell death mechanisms and DNA repair functionality. Talazoparib was combined with chemo- orradiotherapy to evaluate potential synergy. Cell lines treated long termwith an inhibitor normalizingD-2-HG levels were investigated for synthetic lethality with talazoparib. We report that talazoparibsensitivity was variable and irrespective of IDH mutation status. All cell lines expressed AtaxiaTelangiectasia Mutated (ATM), but a subset was impaired in poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation (PARylation)capacity, homologous recombination, andO-6-methylguanine-DNAmethyltransferase (MGMT) expression.Talazoparib synergized with temozolomide or radiation, independent of IDH1 mutant inhibition.This study suggests that talazoparib combined with temozolomide or radiation are promisingtherapeutic strategies for chondrosarcoma, irrespective of IDH mutation status. A subset ofchondrosarcomas may be deficient in nonclassical DNA repair pathways, suggesting that PARPinhibitor sensitivity is multifactorial in chondrosarcoma. Show less
Ewing and chondrosaroma are two forms of primary bone cancer. The few clinical studies that are published in recent decades show disappointing results. With a 5 year survival of 10% for inoperable... Show moreEwing and chondrosaroma are two forms of primary bone cancer. The few clinical studies that are published in recent decades show disappointing results. With a 5 year survival of 10% for inoperable Ewing sarcoma and 2% for inoperable chondrosarcoma patients the outcome is poor. If a patient has not responded to standard treatment, they are often treated with combinations based on expert opinion of the treating physician. These treatment combinations have not been investigated in studies because of the small patient numbers which makes starting a study very difficult and time-consuming. One combination is of the chemotherapeutic agents etoposide with carboplatin or cisplatin. Analysis of the survival data of patients treated with these combinations shows that they are comparable to other standard treatment options. New non-chemotherapy treatment options are currently being investigated. Examples are the IGF-1R and PARP route. The current knowledge of both routes shows that disregulation causes malignant transformation and / or disease progression. Inhibition of these routes is therefore a possible treatment. In clinical studies, the results are not positive for all patients. This is due to incorrect patient selection and not being tested in combination with already used treatments. Show less
Aims: Chondrosarcoma, osteosarcoma and Ewing sarcoma form the majority of malignant primary tumours of bone. High-grade bone sarcomas require intensive treatment due to their rapid and invasive... Show moreAims: Chondrosarcoma, osteosarcoma and Ewing sarcoma form the majority of malignant primary tumours of bone. High-grade bone sarcomas require intensive treatment due to their rapid and invasive growth pattern and metastasising capabilities. This nationwide study covers overall incidence, treatment and survival patterns of bone sarcomas in a 15-year period (2000-2014) in the total population of the Netherlands.Patients and methods: Data for this study were derived from the Netherlands Cancer Registry, which receives primary notification from the national pathology database. Classification and categorisation was based on the ICD-O-3 classification and the WHO classification 2013 applied according to our clinicopathological expertise. Overall incidence over the 15-year-period was calculated as a rate per 100,000 person-years (using the European Standardised Rate, ESR). Survival was analysed with Kaplan-Meier curves and Cox proportional hazards regression.Results: Incidence for high-grade chondrosarcoma (n = 429) was estimated at 0.15 per 100,000 ESR, and 5-year overall survival at 65.9% (95% confidence interval (CI): 61.0%-70.4%). Incidence for high-grade central osteosarcoma (n = 605) was estimated at 0.25 per 100,000 ESR and 5-year survival at 53.9% (95% CI: 49.7%-58.0%). Ewing sarcoma incidence (n = 334) was estimated at 0.15 per 100,000 ESR and 5-year survival at 59.3% (95% CI: 53.5%-64.6%). For high-grade central osteosarcoma, treatment at a bone tumour centre was associated with better survival (HR 0.593).Conclusions: This study provides comprehensive incidence estimates for all the main primary bone sarcomas over a 15-year time period in a Northern European country with little migration. Centralisation of bone sarcoma care improves the clinical outcome in osteosarcoma. Show less
Background: A cohort of 201 patients with small bowel gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST) treated between January 1st, 2009 and December 31st, 2016 in five GIST expertise centers in the... Show moreBackground: A cohort of 201 patients with small bowel gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST) treated between January 1st, 2009 and December 31st, 2016 in five GIST expertise centers in the Netherlands was analyzed. Goal of this study was to describe the clinical, surgical and pathological characteristics of this rare subpopulation of GIST patients, registered in the Dutch GIST registry.Methods: Clinical outcomes and risk factors of patients with small bowel GIST who underwent surgery or treated with systemic therapy were analyzed. A classification was made based on disease status at diagnosis (localized vs. metastasized).Results: 201 patients with small bowel GIST were registered of which 138 patients (69%) were diagnosed with localized disease and 63 patients (31%) with metastatic disease. Approximately 19% of the patients had emergency surgery, and in 22% GIST was an accidental finding. In patients with high risk localized disease, recurrence occurred less often in patients who received adjuvant treatment (4/32) compared to patients who did not (20/31, p < 0.01). Disease progression during palliative imatinib treatment occurred in 23 patients (28%) after a median of 20.7 (range 1.8-47.1) months. Ongoing response was established in 52/82 patients on first line palliative treatment with imatinib after a median treatment time of 30.6 (range 2.5-155.3) months.Conclusion: Patients with small-bowel GIST more frequently present with metastatic disease when compared to patients with gastric GIST in literature. We advocate for Prospective registration of these patients and investigate the use of surgery in patients with limited metastatic disease. (C) 2018 Elsevier Ltd, BASO similar to The Association for Cancer Surgery, and the European Society of Surgical Oncology. All rights reserved. Show less
Younger, E.; Litiere, S.; Cesne, A. le; Mir, O.; Gelderblom, H.; Italiano, A.; ... ; Graaf, W.T.A. van der 2018